'Nother New Member [message #8111] |
Sun, 28 January 2007 00:07 |
ampaholic
Messages: 7 Registered: January 2007 Location: Northeast Ohio
|
Junior Member |
|
|
Hi, folks:
Just today I picked up a 1970 Kustom K200 bass amp with a 3x15 speaker cabinet, tuck & roll, in black, with its original covers, in great condition. I'm still learning a bit about it, having been a Marshall/Fender guy all my life, and luckily, I happened upon this website.
Normally, I'd never have thought of acquiring a Kustom, but I recall them being well-regarded in my youth (I'm 55 now). And last summer, at a county fair, I happened to hear a pretty good rock band, whose name I forget, who exclusively used vintage Kustom gear (except for the guitars, I'll add). I was impressed, and didn't forget about that evening. Well, I got an itch to try playing bass guitar lately, bought one, and I didn't care for the sound through my Marshall stack. No depth or presence. So I've been amp hunting. And today I made the purchase, only a little bit on impulse. I have to say the Kustom sounds very good with a Fender Jazz Bass, the little I've played it so far, and I'm looking forward to working with it a lot more. Yeah, it'll rattle the windows, but at my age, 100 watts isn't as loud as it used to be. But it does have a nice tone.
Anyway, I may post some pics and ask if anyone can help ID the amp and cab for me, if I can't figure it out based on the literature available here.
Regards,
Ampaholic
|
|
|
Re: 'Nother New Member [message #8112 is a reply to message #8111] |
Sun, 28 January 2007 08:33 |
rodak
Messages: 518 Registered: October 2001 Location: Georgia
|
Senior Member |
|
|
Welcome, and congrats on what sounds like an excellent purchase! If you can post the serial#, someone else will come along and help you date the amp.
A band with all Kustom gear! Not something you see often these days. I have a good picture of such a band at my website: http://www.combo-organ.com/ Click on the "Kustom" tab, and scroll down four or 5 screens to see it.
Interesting story about that pic. I found it originally here at this site, in the Literature section. The organist in the shot had an unusual name, and I was able to find him on the Internet, and he sent me the large color photo from the same shoot, as well as the pic of him taking a picture from behind the organ in the studio.
BTW, as you can see from my site, organs are my hobby, but I'm actually a bass player. A K200/3x15 does make an awesome looking bass rig, doesn't it?
www.combo-organ.com
|
|
|
Re: 'Nother New Member [message #8113 is a reply to message #8112] |
Sun, 28 January 2007 10:39 |
RoyC
Messages: 97 Registered: April 2000 Location: East Central Illinois
|
Member |
|
|
Welcome to the Board!
I'll bet that 3x15 rig is impressive - both visually and audio-wise.
I'd forgotten just how good and punchy a 200 B1 could sound until recently, when a spare B1 I have got called into temp duty on a 2x15 cab that I normally run with a 250.
It sounded good enough I was tempted to leave it on there for awhile.
Nice rig!
(although the thought of hauling that cab around makes my back hurt . . .)
[Updated on: Sun, 28 January 2007 10:40] Report message to a moderator
|
|
|
Re: 'Nother New Member [message #8114 is a reply to message #8112] |
Sun, 28 January 2007 11:34 |
ampaholic
Messages: 7 Registered: January 2007 Location: Northeast Ohio
|
Junior Member |
|
|
Hi, and thanks for the welcomes.
The back of the amp has a tag clearly marked K200B1, and the serial number is 57041. The speaker cabinet, which measures 57" high x 25" wide x 14" deep has a tag with serial number 10144. The stack is darned near as tall as I am. The cab's speaker jack is marked "CTS", so I'm guessing that's what's inside. I don't see any evidence that the back has ever been off of the cab. All the screws are intact and pristine (disregarding a bit of rust). Yep, it's a heavy beast. Luckily, it's not going anywhere.
The previous owner gave me a speaker cable he claimed was original to the set, but I have my doubts. It's a pretty skinny little thing, and it looks like a guitar cable to me. Any thoughts on this? I think I'll use something I know has some meat to it, rather than the supplied cable, but I'd like to know if he was correct.
My younger brother is building a website at the moment, and I'm sure we'll get some pics of our gear posted one of these days. Meanwhile, you can see the very beginnings of the site at www.amparchives.com.
Thanks,
ampaholic
[Updated on: Sun, 28 January 2007 11:35] Report message to a moderator
|
|
|
|
|
Re: 'Nother New Member [message #8121 is a reply to message #8111] |
Mon, 29 January 2007 15:58 |
daveobergoenner@gmail.com
Messages: 104 Registered: January 2007 Location: Missouri
|
Senior Member |
|
|
I'd recommend against using a guitar cord for a speaker cable.
The tiny little conductors in guitar cables are fine for the tiny little signal coming out of a guitar, but not so great for delivering 100 watts RMS into your speaker cabinet.
For my current K200 bass set-up, I use some 12ga. copper (like Monster Cable)...with decent metal plugs. This feeds two 8 ohm, JBL E140's. Sounds mighty nice.
I bought a brand new, K400 set-up in about 1970. As I recall, the original cables (from the factory) with that K400, 6-15 inch set-up came with some speaker cables which looked to be about 14 or 16ga. black lamp cord. Those had molded black connectors at each end. They were pretty long too...really, too long. Used to put one of the 3-15 cabinets on each side of the drummer...yup, he could hear my bass JUST FINE!!!
(and that's probably about all he could hear)
Dave O.
Dave 0 Wall-O-Bass
Webpage - <a href="http://webpages.charter.net/daveobieone/" target="_blank">http://webpages.charter.net/daveobieone/</a >
|
|
|
Re: 'Nother New Member [message #8124 is a reply to message #8121] |
Mon, 29 January 2007 16:39 |
C4ster
Messages: 686 Registered: June 2001 Location: Mukwonago, WI (Milwaukee...
|
Senior Member |
|
|
Hi Dave,
I used to have the same cables. Now I have 1 and the other 1 and the footswitch left years ago. For the power we send to the speaker cabinets, #12 is overkill. Don't get me started on Monster cable. I use #14 or #16 lamp cord or SO cord. Buy or make cables that are just long enough to reach the speaker. There is no sense in having all that cord sitting on the floor. The longer the cable, the more power loss. So less is better. Also, there are other reasons for not using shielded audio cable besides the tiny wires. The higher capacitance can cause oscillations but that is another huge topic left to the geeks.
Conrad
P.S. Monster cable is overrated. I saw a recepticle advertised in an audiophile magazine that was selling for $112. I could buy the same recepticle for $15 from the wholesale house. Make outrageous claims and watch the price go up.
|
|
|
Re: 'Nother New Member [message #8127 is a reply to message #8124] |
Mon, 29 January 2007 16:58 |
daveobergoenner@gmail.com
Messages: 104 Registered: January 2007 Location: Missouri
|
Senior Member |
|
|
Don't worry, I'm not a "cable nut".
What I used was "like" Monster...probably came from Radio Shack or something...just what I had laying around. You are quite correct, for a short run, #12 was overkill. Just made it long enough to make it from the head, down to the speaker cabinet jack comfortably.
The cable rip-off business makes me crazy in the high-end audio field. SO much money wasted, which could be put to so much better use in the form of better components...or just a bunch more CD's to listen too.
Dave O.
Dave 0 Wall-O-Bass
Webpage - <a href="http://webpages.charter.net/daveobieone/" target="_blank">http://webpages.charter.net/daveobieone/</a >
|
|
|
Re: 'Nother New Member [message #8128 is a reply to message #8111] |
Mon, 29 January 2007 18:31 |
ampaholic
Messages: 7 Registered: January 2007 Location: Northeast Ohio
|
Junior Member |
|
|
Thanks, all.
I'm currently using a stout, commercially-available, 6' cable (like Monster cable) that's meant for speaker cabs, and I've ditched the skinny one. Original or not, it said "Radio Shack" on it in small letters, so it's worthless as far as I'm concerned. I didn't see that until after I wrote the first time.
BC, I'll try to find out the name of the band I saw with all the vintage Kustom gear. For reference, they were playing the Ashtabula County (Ohio) Fair during August of 2006. I'll see what I can dig up.
I gave the Jazz Bass a decent setup last evening and played the Kustom for perhaps an hour and a half. I'm starting to get a feel for the various tones available, and I'm surprised by the amount of variations I'm finding. And most of them are pretty darned good. About the only gripe I have, and my wife would disagree, is that the amp seems somewhat underpowered for the speaker cab. Yeah, turned all the way up it'll rattle the house, but the cab sounds like it could absorb a couple of hundred more watts without flinching. I've yet to take the back off the cab; I'm assuming I'll find CTS speakers in there. The dust domes are definitely black, not aluminum. But whatever's in there is about as stout as I've ever heard.
More later,
Ampaholic
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|